THE DIVINE COMEDY: Inferno, Purgatorio & Paradiso (3 Classic Translations in One Edition). Dante Alighieri

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THE DIVINE COMEDY: Inferno, Purgatorio & Paradiso (3 Classic Translations in One Edition) - Dante Alighieri

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Or conscience smote him, violent upsprang

       Spinning on either sole. I do believe

       My teacher well was pleas'd, with so compos'd

       A lip, he listen'd ever to the sound

       Of the true words I utter'd. In both arms

       He caught, and to his bosom lifting me

       Upward retrac'd the way of his descent.

       Nor weary of his weight he press'd me close,

       Till to the summit of the rock we came,

       Our passage from the fourth to the fifth pier.

       His cherish'd burden there gently he plac'd

       Upon the rugged rock and steep, a path

       Not easy for the clamb'ring goat to mount.

       Thence to my view another vale appear'd

       AND now the verse proceeds to torments new,

       Fit argument of this the twentieth strain

       Of the first song, whose awful theme records

       The spirits whelm'd in woe. Earnest I look'd

       Into the depth, that open'd to my view,

       Moisten'd with tears of anguish, and beheld

       A tribe, that came along the hollow vale,

       In silence weeping: such their step as walk

       Quires chanting solemn litanies on earth.

       As on them more direct mine eye descends,

       Each wondrously seem'd to be revers'd

       At the neck-bone, so that the countenance

       Was from the reins averted: and because

       None might before him look, they were compell'd

       To' advance with backward gait. Thus one perhaps

       Hath been by force of palsy clean transpos'd,

       But I ne'er saw it nor believe it so.

       Now, reader! think within thyself, so God

       Fruit of thy reading give thee! how I long

       Could keep my visage dry, when I beheld

       Near me our form distorted in such guise,

       That on the hinder parts fall'n from the face

       The tears down-streaming roll'd. Against a rock

       I leant and wept, so that my guide exclaim'd:

       "What, and art thou too witless as the rest?

       Here pity most doth show herself alive,

       When she is dead. What guilt exceedeth his,

       Who with Heaven's judgment in his passion strives?

       Raise up thy head, raise up, and see the man,

       Before whose eyes earth gap'd in Thebes, when all

       Cried out, 'Amphiaraus, whither rushest?

       'Why leavest thou the war?' He not the less

       Fell ruining far as to Minos down,

       Whose grapple none eludes. Lo! how he makes

       The breast his shoulders, and who once too far

       Before him wish'd to see, now backward looks,

       And treads reverse his path. Tiresias note,

       Who semblance chang'd, when woman he became

       Of male, through every limb transform'd, and then

       Once more behov'd him with his rod to strike

       The two entwining serpents, ere the plumes,

       That mark'd the better sex, might shoot again.

       "Aruns, with more his belly facing, comes.

       On Luni's mountains 'midst the marbles white,

       Where delves Carrara's hind, who wons beneath,

       A cavern was his dwelling, whence the stars

       And main-sea wide in boundless view he held.

       "The next, whose loosen'd tresses overspread

       Her bosom, which thou seest not (for each hair

       On that side grows) was Manto, she who search'd

       Through many regions, and at length her seat

       Fix'd in my native land, whence a short space

       My words detain thy audience. When her sire

       From life departed, and in servitude

       The city dedicate to Bacchus mourn'd,

       Long time she went a wand'rer through the world.

       Aloft in Italy's delightful land

       A lake there lies, at foot of that proud Alp,

       That o'er the Tyrol locks Germania in,

       Its name Benacus, which a thousand rills,

       Methinks, and more, water between the vale

       Camonica and Garda and the height

       Of Apennine remote. There is a spot

       At midway of that lake, where he who bears

       Of Trento's flock the past'ral staff, with him

       Of Brescia, and the Veronese, might each

       Passing that way his benediction give.

       A garrison of goodly site and strong

       Peschiera stands, to awe with front oppos'd

       The Bergamese and Brescian, whence the shore

       More slope each way descends. There, whatsoev'er

       Benacus' bosom holds not, tumbling o'er

       Down falls, and winds a river flood beneath

       Through the green pastures. Soon as in his course

      

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